The January / February 2019 issue of ENT & Audiology News, Volume 27, Issue 6, includes an article by Bryan Pollard, President of Hyperacusis Research. The introduction is cut and pasted here and the full article is attached as a PDF.
Unravelling the mystery of hyperacusis with pain
When a person says that sound causes them pain, how can we understand this, and determine what processes are involved? Bryan Pollard navigates us through what is presently known.
Pain has long been underrepresented – and often, completely overlooked – as a component of hyperacusis. The history of the disorder offers insights as to why. The word 'hyperacusis' was introduced by Pearlman in 1938. The debate for both the name of the disorder and associated symptoms was underway by 1949 when Tschiassny, in describing sensations of pain associated with noise in Bell's Palsy, advocated for the use of 'phonophobia' (which he defined as hypersensitivity for auditory stimuli) and pointed to other popular terms at the time, such as dysacusis and hyperesthesia acustica. He felt hyperacusis was insufficient for his patients because there was "no increased acuity of the organ of hearing". In 2014, Tyler, et al, referred to more than a dozen definitions of hyperacusis. Two of these include the term 'pain'. While numerous other names developed for sound tolerance issues, hyperacusis won out as the dominant name, while phonophobia is common but has come to refer exclusively to the fear of sound.
Unravelling the mystery of hyperacusis with pain
When a person says that sound causes them pain, how can we understand this, and determine what processes are involved? Bryan Pollard navigates us through what is presently known.
Pain has long been underrepresented – and often, completely overlooked – as a component of hyperacusis. The history of the disorder offers insights as to why. The word 'hyperacusis' was introduced by Pearlman in 1938. The debate for both the name of the disorder and associated symptoms was underway by 1949 when Tschiassny, in describing sensations of pain associated with noise in Bell's Palsy, advocated for the use of 'phonophobia' (which he defined as hypersensitivity for auditory stimuli) and pointed to other popular terms at the time, such as dysacusis and hyperesthesia acustica. He felt hyperacusis was insufficient for his patients because there was "no increased acuity of the organ of hearing". In 2014, Tyler, et al, referred to more than a dozen definitions of hyperacusis. Two of these include the term 'pain'. While numerous other names developed for sound tolerance issues, hyperacusis won out as the dominant name, while phonophobia is common but has come to refer exclusively to the fear of sound.